All the touring bike's trees are rear of the pivot point
I'm not sure when the change to the trailing forks took place. I do know that the forks on my '76 FLH are in front of the steering head.
When I bought my first new HD in '08, a SERK Annie, I went to a dealership for a HD test ride day and road a new RK to see what I was getting myself in for.
I had ridden the '76 FLH for several years and was used to it, but let me tell you that if you're in a parking lot and just loosen your grip on the bars, the frontend will drop to either side just like you were trying to balance a teeter totter. Once you got up to speed it was okay. But under 20 mph it was and still is a handful.
The RK I rode that day seemed like it had power steering. It was SOOOOO easy to handle in a slow speed situation. On the road it was very nice as well.
I'm sure the slow speed handling has everything to do with the position of the forks being behind the steering head.
That being said, I'm not sure how you would tighten the steering head bearings on my old FLH. If you tried a fall away the fork would just drop to either side and stay there, just a big thud is all you would hear. I'm sure I tightened them per the manual at the time, but I cannot right now remember how I did it.
I agree with lots of others here that there is an inherent design flaw with the touring frame geometry, '09 and later as well as '08 and earlier. Yes, tightening the head bearings will take care of the problem, but they're still relying on a preload to stop this wobble. The steering head should have a certain amount of positive stability designed in, not "fix" it with preloading the head bearings. There should be no reason why two side load sealed for life roller bearings snug fit into the head shouldn't do just fine and just change them out every 50k miles as maintenance. There would be NO adjustments at all.
Cars correct for stability with positive caster. More positive caster creates better tracking stability and slightly harder steering as you have to push to overcome the positive caster. Less caster increases responsiveness in the steering, but too far and it will self steer to either direction and that's deadly.
Sorry I'm rambling here... I just think there is a solution available that's not being shared by mother Harley!!!